When Red Roses Hit His Office, His Perfect Control Finally Broke-hothiyenvy_5

Valentina Chen should have thrown the flowers away before she rode the elevator up to the 34th floor.

She knew that before the doors even opened.

The roses were too red, too obvious, too loud for a Monday morning office where everyone pretended their personal lives ended the second their badges tapped through security.

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They made the lobby guard glance down.

They made the woman at the coffee kiosk smile.

They made Valentina’s own reflection in the elevator doors look like someone walking into trouble with both hands full.

The bouquet smelled green and sharp from the cut stems.

The paper around it crinkled every time she adjusted her grip.

Outside, rain still streaked the windows, leaving the whole building washed in gray light, but the executive floor had its usual early-morning cleanliness: lemon polish, printer heat, and expensive silence.

Valentina had spent 3 years learning the language of that silence.

Mason’s silence meant he was thinking.

The board’s silence meant the numbers were worse than anyone admitted.

Her own silence meant she was doing the responsible thing, even when the responsible thing was just swallowing words she had no safe place to put.

She had been hired as Mason’s executive assistant 3 years earlier after two rounds of interviews, one background check, and a final meeting where he asked only three questions.

Could she handle pressure?

Could she keep confidential material confidential?

Could she tell him the truth even when other people were paid to flatter him?

Valentina had said yes to all three because rent was due, her mother’s car needed work, and she was tired of being underestimated by people who mistook quiet for weak.

Mason had not underestimated her.

That was the first problem.

He noticed when she reorganized his calendar so he had seven minutes to breathe between meetings.

He noticed when she flagged a contract clause the legal team had missed.

He noticed when she switched his black coffee to half-caf after he spent a week answering emails at 2:00 a.m. and still trying to pretend exhaustion was discipline.

Attention can feel like respect until it starts feeling personal.

Valentina had never known where Mason’s attention ended.

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